In his first five years as the University of Iowa head men's basketball coach, Fran McCaffery has brought enthusiasm and excitement back to the Hawkeye basketball program. After 19 seasons as a head coach, he has coached his teams to seven NCAA tournaments and three NITs, posting a record of 347-252 (.579).

Since taking over the program in 2010, the Hawkeyes have vaulted back to national prominence. After an NIT runner-up finish and 25-win season in 2013, which matched the second-most victories by a Hawkeye team in program history, McCaffery coached the Hawkeyes to back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances in 2014 and 2015. McCaffery guided Iowa to first division finishes in the Big Ten each of the past three seasons, including a top three finish in 2015.

In addition to earning the program's best Big Ten finish in nine years, McCaffery guided Iowa to seven road wins, six of which came in league play. The seven true road victories were the most by a Hawkeye team since 1987. Last March, McCaffery and the Hawkeyes posted the largest margin of victory ever in an NCAA Tournament 7/10 match-up, beating 10th-seeded Davidson 83-52 in the second round. The 31-point win was the largest by any Hawkeye team in a postseason game.

The positive steps McCaffery has taken the Iowa men's basketball program in five seasons are par-for-the-course for a coach who has demonstrated his ability to rebuild programs. McCaffery coached Iowa to the 2014 and 2015 NCAA Tournaments, becoming one of just 12 Division I head coaches to take four different programs to the NCAA Tournament.

McCaffery and the Hawkeyes have made Carver-Hawkeye Arena one of the most feared arenas to play in nationally. Fans have embraced McCaffery and his team's style of play, with attendance increasing by more than 50 percent since 2010. Iowa sold out a combined 15 games the last two seasons, including 11 in 2014. The Hawkeyes continue to feed off the energy in Carver-Hawkeye Arena, winning 59 home games between 2011-15. The 59 victories are the most home wins over a four-year span in program history. Iowa won a school-record 18 home contests in 2013.

McCaffery has accumulated 15 upper division finishes in 19 seasons as a head coach, including each of the last three years. Overall, the Hawkeyes have amassed 85 victories the last four seasons (21.3 average), a total that ranks sixth most in program history over a four-year span.

Under McCaffery's direction, Iowa has won 20 or more games each of the last three seasons, the program's longest streak in 15 years. The Hawkeyes accumulated 25 victories in 2013, which equal the second-most win total in school history, 20 in 2014 and 22 in 2015.

McCaffery's up-tempo style of play is a favorite among his players. In 2014, Iowa averaged 81.5 points per game, a scoring output that was tops in the Big Ten and 10th nationally. The 81.5 average was the highest by an Iowa team since 1995 (83.6 ppg) and the second-highest by a Fran McCaffery-coached team (Lehigh's 1988 squad average 82.0 ppg).

McCaffery has posted nine seasons of 20 wins or more as a head coach, including seven in the last nine years. McCaffery, who won his 300th career game as a head coach on March 9, 2013, against Nebraska, has served as head coach at four institutions: Iowa, Siena, UNC-Greensboro and Lehigh. The four teams had a combined record of 35-84 (.204) the season prior to his arrival. By year three, they had a total record of 89-45 (.664).

McCaffery continues to create interest with recruits on a national level due to his tireless work ethic. McCaffery's is a proven recruiter, demonstrated by he and his staff signing the 25th-best recruiting class in the country prior to the 2012-13 season. His 2015 recruiting class includes talented players from across the country.

McCaffery has coached Iowa to 18 or more victories the last four seasons (2012-15). The last time an Iowa coach won 18-or-more games in four consecutive seasons was 1996-99 by Tom Davis. In 2012, McCaffery guided the Hawkeyes to 18 wins and an NIT bid. Iowa improved by seven wins from 2011 to 2012. Additionally, he led Iowa to four more Big Ten victories in 2012 than in 2011.

McCaffery continues to get the most of his talent, coaching Matt Gatens, Melsahn Basabe, Roy Devyn Marble, Jarrod Uthoff, and Aaron White to All-Big Ten status the past five seasons. Marble (2014) and White (2015) became Iowa's first duo to earn first-team all-conference laurels in consecutive seasons since 2006-07. Additionally, Marble and White were both named NABC and USBWA all-district in 2014 and 2015, respectively. McCaffery also developed Gabriel Olaseni (2012-15) into the 2015 Big Ten Sixth Man of the Year.

The Philadelphia native, recruited and coached White to an illustrious Hawkeye career. White became the first Iowa player to score 1,800 points and collect 900 rebounds, while also leading the team in rebounding all four years. He finished his career ranked second in scoring (1,859) and third in rebounding (901). He made more free throws than any other Big Ten player the last 50 years, ranking third all-time in Big Ten annals with 618.

McCaffery, who has three decades of collegiate basketball coaching experience, was named the University of Iowa's 22nd head men's basketball coach on March 29, 2010. McCaffery, 56, came to Iowa after five successful seasons at Siena.

McCaffery's five years at Siena were the best in its 70-year history. He led the Saints on an incredible run that ended with three straight Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference championships and NCAA Tournament appearances. In so doing, Siena became the only program in the country to win its regular season and postseason title 2008-10.

McCaffery's Saints owned a 112-51 record in his five years with the program. After orchestrating the fifth greatest turnaround in Division I play his first year, McCaffery led Siena to a 20-win season and a MAAC Championship game appearance in his second. In 2007-08, Siena took its biggest step forward under his direction, earning the MAAC regular-season and tournament championship, as well as an NCAA Tournament first-round win over Vanderbilt. In 2008-09, the Siena program enjoyed unprecedented success. Siena won the regular-season title by equaling a program record with 27 wins before capturing the tournament crown. The Saints went on to defeat Ohio State in double overtime in one of the tournament's most exciting games.

In 2010, McCaffery led Siena to its fourth straight 20-win season, something never before achieved in program history. Siena ran away with the league title, clinching the No. 1 seed in the tournament and ultimately knocking off Fairfield in the MAAC title game.

The 2009 MAAC Coach of the Year is the third-winningest coach, by percentage, in league history (68-22, .756). He is the only coach to guide a MAAC program to two NCAA Tournament wins.

The 2008 season will also go down as one of the most memorable in Siena basketball history. McCaffery became just the 31st coach to take three different programs to the "Big Dance", and he was the first to do so with three programs from one-bid leagues (conference's that sent just one team the year his program advanced). Siena pounded Rider in the MAAC title game on its home floor to earn the MAAC's automatic bid. Less than two weeks later, McCaffery put together the perfect game plan and Siena led from start-to-finish in a triumph over Vanderbilt. Many considered the victory the greatest in school history, challenged at the time only by the program's 1989 upset of Stanford in the NCAA first round.

Siena won20 games in McCaffery's second season (2007) and tied for third place in the MAAC with a 12-6 finish. McCaffery's Saints were the highest scoring team in the league, and they peaked at the right time, winning seven of their last eight regular-season games and advancing to play for the league championship.

McCaffery orchestrated the turnaround with stellar recruiting and bold vision. His first recruit - senior Kenny Hasbrouck - graduated as the most important player in program history. He was named MAAC Rookie of the Year as a freshman, MAAC second team and all-Tournament team as a sophomore, collegeinsider.com Mid Major Player of the Year, MAAC first team and MAAC Tournament MVP as a junior and MAAC Player of the Year, MAAC Tournament MVP, NABC All-District and MAAC first team as a senior.

His second class (first full class) is widely regarded as the best in program history. Edwin Ubiles, Alex Franklin and Ronald Moore finished their four-year careers with a 97-38 (.719) overall record, three MAAC Championships in four title game appearances, three-straight NCAA Tournament appearances and two NCAA Tournament first round victories. Ubiles was a two-time MAAC first team, NABC All District first team and MAAC Tournament team selection and the 2007 MAAC co-Rookie of the Year. Alex Franklin, a two-time NABC All District selection, earned 2008 and 2009 MAAC second team and MAAC Tournament team honors. He won the 2010 MAAC Player of the Year award (Siena's second straight) and the 2010 MAAC Tournament MVP. Ronald Moore, the pulse of the team, earned 2009 MAAC second team and 2010 MAAC first team honors as well as a spot on the 2010 MAAC Tournament team. He became the MAAC's all-time assists leader in the 2010 MAAC Championship game.

In total, four Saints were named to either the first or second All-MAAC team in 2009, newcomer Kyle Downey was an All-Rookie selection and Clarence Jackson was named MAAC Sixth Man of the Year.

McCaffery was introduced as Siena's 14th head men's basketball coach on April 1, 2005. McCaffery has recruited and coached several players who have gone on to play basketball professionally, some at the highest level.

McCaffery took over at Siena from UNC-Greensboro, where he posted a 90-87 record in six seasons. In his first year at the helm, Greensboro compiled a 15-13 record overall and a 9-7 Southern Conference mark, good for third place in the North Division. It was the 18th-most improved record nationally among NCAA Division I teams.

In McCaffery's second season, he guided the Spartans to unprecedented heights with a 19-12 record and the 2001 SoCon Tournament Championship. The Spartans defeated Chattanooga, 67-66, in the finals and received the SoCon's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The following year (2001-02) McCaffery led the Spartans to their first 20-win season since joining the conference. It marked the first time the program claimed a share of the SoCon North Division title as well. After falling to eventual tournament champion Davidson in the conference tournament semifinals, the Spartans were awarded a berth into the 2002 NIT.

In his final year in Greensboro, McCaffery brought the Spartans to the brink of the NCAA Tournament before a SoCon Championship game loss to Chattanooga. He led UNCG to a victory over Davidson in the semifinals, defeating a team that had been 16-0 in conference play. A big part of that success was SoCon Freshman of the Year Kyle Hines. Hines set UNCG and SoCon records for blocked shots, and also broke several other UNCG single-game and freshman single-season marks.

McCaffery spent the 11 years prior to his arrival at Greensboro at Notre Dame as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator, working on the staffs of Richard "Digger" Phelps and John MacLeod.

Among the players he recruited to play for Notre Dame were Pat Garrity, CoSIDA Academic All-American of the Year in 1998, and Troy Murphy, the Big East Player of the Year in 2000 and an eventual first-round NBA draft pick. Garrity was also a first-round NBA draft pick and the Big East Player of the Year in 1997. In addition to Murphy and Garrity, McCaffery was involved in recruiting NBA First Round picks LaPhonso Ellis (1992 Draft, #5 Denver), Monty Williams (1994 Draft, #24 New York) and Ryan Humphrey (2002 Draft, #19-Utah Jazz).

He helped the Irish to NCAA Tournament appearances in 1989 and 1990. Notre Dame reached the NIT finals in 1992, losing to Virginia in overtime, and advanced to the quarterfinals of the event in 1997.

At 26, McCaffery was the nation's youngest Division I head coach when he was hired Sept. 11, 1985, at Lehigh. McCaffery capped his three-year tenure with the Engineers with a 21-win season and an NCAA berth in 1988.

In three seasons as head coach at Lehigh, he compiled a 49-39 overall record and guided the team to the NCAA Tournament in 1988. At the time he was the youngest head coach to reach the NCAA Tournament. His Lehigh teams had two winning seasons in three years and the 1987-88 squad's 21-10 record remains the best in program history. Lehigh had just four winning seasons in the 55 years prior to his arrival.

McCaffery was assistant coach and recruiting coordinator at Lehigh from 1983-85 and helped the team to its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 1985. As recruiting coordinator, he helped sign Darren Queenan, who remains Lehigh's all-time leading scorer. Queenan was second in the nation in scoring in 1988, and went on to play in the USBL.

McCaffery was assistant varsity coach and head sub-varsity coach at his alma mater, Pennsylvania, during the 1982-83 season. At Penn, he worked for Craig Littlepage, who is now the director of athletics at the University of Virginia.

McCaffery lettered three years as point guard on the men's basketball team at Pennsylvania as one of the first transfers to play for the Quakers. He earned a bachelor of science degree from The Wharton School of Finance and Commerce in 1982. In 1985 he received his master's degree in education from Lehigh.

In three seasons as a player he helped lead Penn to a pair of NCAA Tournament appearances and Ivy League titles and one berth in the NIT. As a senior in 1981-82 he led the Ivy League in steals and assists and was voted the team's Most Inspirational Player.

Recruited as the successor at point guard to Skip Brown at Wake Forest, McCaffery played one season at Wake Forest, 1977-78, helping the Demon Deacons to a 19-10 record. Nicknamed "White Magic," he started 11 of 28 games as coach Carl Tacy's team finished runner-up in the ACC Tournament to eventual NCAA runner-up Duke. Wake defeated North Carolina twice in three meetings and won five of the eight games it played at the Greensboro Coliseum.

The McCaffery's have been a champion for Coaches vs. Cancer and American Cancer Society’s Relay For Life. For 15 years, the McCaffery’s have been actively involved with the Coaches vs. Cancer program and have raised significant funds to support the American Cancer Society’s (ACS) efforts, including more than $1.3 million since becoming Iowa’s head coach in 2010. His efforts were honored during the 2015 Final Four weekend in Indianapolis, as McCaffery was honored with the Coaches vs. Cancer Champion Award. The distinction is awarded annually to a college coach who has been engaged vigorously in the Coaches vs. Cancer program’s fundraising, education and promotional initiatives and has demonstrated leadership in the fight to save more lives from cancer. The ACS will award the McCaffery’s with the Fighting Spirit Award on Sept. 30, 2015, in Troy, New York.

In addition to their work with the American Cancer Society and Coaches vs. Cancer, the McCaffery’s are in the process of helping with the launch of a new Adolescents and Young Adult Cancer Center in Iowa City.

McCaffery, a Philadelphia native who attended LaSalle High School, and his wife Margaret have four children: sons, Connor, Patrick and Jonathan and a daughter, Marit.

Fran McCaffery

Born

May 23, 1959

Hometown

Philadelphia, Pa.

High School

LaSalle, 1977

College

B.S. in Economics, The Wharton School (Penn), 1982Master of Education, Lehigh, 1985

Family

Wife, Margaret

Sons, Connor, Patrick and Jonathan Francis

Daughter, Marit Katherine

Brother, Jack (sportswriter in Philadelphia area)

Coaching Honors

MAAC Coach of the Year, 2009

NABC District I Coach of the Year, 2009-10

Coaches vs. Cancer Champion Award, 2015

Coaching History (32 years)

1982-83

Assistant Coach, Penn

1983-85

Assistant Coach, Lehigh

1985-88

Head Coach, Lehigh (youngest head coach in America at age 26)

1988-99

Assistant Coach, Notre Dame

1999-05

Head Coach, UNC-Greensboro

2005-10

Head Coach, Siena

2010-present

Head Coach, University of Iowa

Coaching Chart

Overall

347-252 (.579) - (19 seasons)

At Iowa

96-75 (.561) - (five seasons)

At Siena

112-51 (.688) - (five seasons)

At UNCG

90-87 (.508) - (six seasons)

At Lehigh

49-40 (.551) - (three seasons)

NCAA Tournament

3-7 - (seven appearances*)

NIT

5-3 - (three appearances)

Preseason NIT

1-1 - (one appearance)

*McCaffery is the first coach to bring three different programs from one-bid leagues to the NCAA Tournament (conferences that sent just one team the year his program advanced).

McCaffery in Postseason Play

1988

NCAA Tournament - - Lehigh

1989

NCAA Tournament - - Notre Dame

1990

NCAA Tournament - - Notre Dame

1992

NIT - - Notre Dame

1997

NIT - - Notre Dame

2001

NCAA Tournament - - UNC-Greensboro

2002

NIT - - UNC-Greensboro

2008

NCAA Tournament - - Siena

2009

NCAA Tournament - - Siena

2010

NCAA Tournament - - Siena

2012

NIT - - Iowa

2013

NIT - - Iowa

2014

NCAA Tournament - - Iowa

2015

NCAA Tournament - - Iowa

Playing Experience

Wake Forest, 1977-78

Penn, 1979-82

Notable players recruited and/or coached at Iowa

Roy Devyn Marble

Garnered the following honors as a senior in 2014: second Team All-America by College Sports Madness, first-team All-Big Ten, NABC First Team All-District Team, USBWA All-District VI Team and named to the 2013 Battle 4 Atlantis All-Tournament Team. Marble was a third team all-league selection as a junior and named to the 2013 NIT All-Tournament team. He ranks fifth in Iowa career scoring (1,694, sixth in assists (397) and seventh in steals (176). The two-time captain is one of only two Big Ten players since 1985-86 to amass 1,675+ points, 375+ assists, 450+ rebounds and 175+ steals.

Aaron White

Garnered the following honors as a senior in 2015: first-team All-Big Ten, NABC First Team All-District Team, USBWA All-District VI Team and named to the 2014 2K Classic All-Tournament Team. Finished his illustrious career ranked second in Iowa scoring (1,859) and third in rebounding (901). Became the first Hawkeye to ever amass 1,800 points and 900 rebounds and lead the team in rebounding all four seasons. He made more free throws than any other Big Ten player the last 50 years, raking third in Big Ten annals with 618.

Matt Gatens

Second Team All-Big Ten in 2012; Named Honorable Mention All-Big Ten in 2010; 2009 Big Ten All-Freshman Team Selection; ranks sixth in Iowa scoring (1,635); ranks second in 3-pointers made (239). He us currently playing professionally in Turkey.

Big East Player of the Year 1997; second team All-America in 1998; Academic All-American of the Year in 1998 and a two-time Academic All-American; selected #19 in the 1998 NBA Draft by Milwaukee

Troy Murphy

Big East Player of the Year in 2000 and co-Big East Player of the Year in 2001; Big East Rookie of the Year in 1999; two-time consensus first team All-American and All-Big East honoree; selected #14 in the 2001 NBA Draft by Golden State

LaPhonso Ellis

Only Notre Dame player to lead the team in blocks each of his four seasons; Selected #5 in the 1992 NBA Draft by Denver

Monty Williams

Selected #24 in the 2002 NBA Draft by Utah

Notable player recruited and coached at Lehigh

Darren Queenan

Co-East Coast Conference Player of the Year in 1987; Lehigh's all-time leading scorer and ranked second in the country in scoring in 1988; one of the most prolific scorers in NCAA history, he is one of only eight players to have amassed 2,700 points and 1,000 rebounds; four-time first team all-conference honoree; Played 16 years professionally overseas.

Mike Polaha

1988 Sporting News All-American; Two-time All-East Coast Conference honoree (1987-88); only Lehigh player to score 1,400 points and have more than 400 rebounds and assists.

Mike Androlewicz

1986 first team All-East Coast Conference selection.

Notable player recruited and coached at UNC-Greensboro

Kyle Hines

2005 Southern Conference Freshman of the Year; 2007 Southern Conference Player of the Year, becoming the first player from UNC Greensboro to earn the honor; All-American in 2007; three-time USBWA All-District selection; one of only four players to garner All-Southern Conference accolades; one of only six players in NCAA history to ever record 2,000 points, 1,000 rebounds and 300 blocks in a career.

Demetrius Cherry

1999 Southern Conference Preseason Player of the Year; two-time first team all-league accolades

Courtney Eldridge

2002 All-Southern Conference honoree.

David Schuck

2002 All-Southern Conference honoree.

Ronnie Burrell

2005 All-Southern Conference honoree.

Jay Joseph

2001 Southern Conference Rookie of the Year.

Notable Players Recruited and/or Coached at Siena

Kenny Hasbrouck

2006 MAAC Rookie of the Year; 2008 collegeinsider.com Mid Major Player of the Year; 2009 MAAC Player of the Year and NABC All-District. Hasbrouck, who has his number retired, was McCaffery's first recruit at Siena. He became Siena's first player to ever make an NBA roster when he signed with the Miami Heat as a free agent in 2010. Currently, he is playing overseas in Spain.

Edwin Ubiles

2007 MAAC co-Freshman of the Year; two-time NABC District 1 selection; 2010 first team all-league honoree; ranks third in all-time career scoring at Siena

Ronald Moore

2010 first team all-MAAC selection; led the country in assists, was a Bob Cousey Award finalist and an NABC All-District honoree in 2010, and is the MAAC's all-time assists leader.

What Others are Saying About Iowa Coach Fran McCaffery

"Coach McCaffery adds a different flavor and is good for the Big Ten Conference. This is going to be a very attractive program for highly skilled players. He comes in with a system that advocates putting the biscuit in the basket, putting points on the board. That's going to be fun. There's no doubt in my mind that when Fran gets this thing going, Iowa City is going to be on fire. He's going to get players, not just because of his system but because he can coach. They're going to score in the 90s, or the high 80s."
Gus Johnson - - College Basketball Analyst, BTN and FOX

"Coach McCaffery did one of the best coaching jobs in the Big Ten this season (2011)."
Wayne Larrivee - - College Basketball Announcer, BTN and Westwood One Radio Network

"I was really impressed watching Iowa the other day. I thought they paid attention to (Fran McCaffery) and did what he wanted them to do."
Brent Musburger - - College Basketball Announcer, ESPN

"Fran McCaffery is a good solid hire for the University of Iowa. Iowa has been hoping for a winner and I believe one has arrived. He's won at Lehigh, UNC-Greensboro and Siena -- if you can win at those places, you can win anywhere. His teams are enjoyable to watch with their style of play; he lets his kids play free. He'll have the Hawkeyes in the NCAA Tournament on a yearly basis."
Doug Gottlieb - - College Basketball Analyst, CBS

"Fran McCaffery is a fine basketball coach, and an even finer person. He can teach the game, identify and attract talent, and he is a man of great substance and integrity. Iowa made a great hire in McCaffery."
Jay Bilas - - College Basketball Analyst, ESPN

"Fran McCaffery is a great hire for Iowa. He was a great assistant coach and has done a great job in making Siena the Gonzaga of the east. He will bring back the traditions of Iowa basketball."
Digger Phelps - - College Basketball Analyst and former Head Coach, Notre Dame

"I think Iowa made an outstanding choice. Fran McCaffery-coached teams are well coached and very well organized."
Ronnie Lester - - UI All-American

"Iowa hired a class act. Respected by his coaching peers, Coach McCaffery is a proven winner who rebuilt the Siena Saints program in quick fashion by being a relentless recruiter who instilled an up tempo style that fans loved and players embraced. During the search process he expressed his vision for the future of the Hawkeye program, while understanding the proud tradition of University of Iowa Basketball."
Bobby Hansen - - UI Final Four Member, 1980; World Champion, Chicago Bulls; Hawkeye Radio Network Analyst

"Fran is a tireless worker, who is going to go out and grind, and that's someone Iowa needed. He won't be afraid to say, 'Hey, this guy is a top-10 recruit and we're going after him because we're Iowa'. I think that's the way it should be. I want the program to be at the level where I chose Iowa over Notre Dame, Kentucky, Michigan and Michigan State. I believe Fran is going to go out and do the work that he's always done. He'll identify kids he feels can take us to the next level; I'm pretty happy about it."
Kenyon Murray - - Iowa Hawkeye Lettermen (1993-96) and BTN College Basketball Analyst

"The number one thing about Fran, is that he has a great feel for the game, and, he understands players. He and I spent a lot of time in traversing the state of Iowa, trying to get Iowa kids to come to Notre Dame. Fran has a great knack for setting an offense and he is a great defensive coach. He has great relationships with his players. This is a great fit for Iowa and a great fit for Fran."
John MacLeod - - Former Head Coach, Notre Dame and former Head Coach, Golden State

"I have been impressed with Coach McCaffery's consistent success, most recently at Siena. His teams are well prepared and his development of players, particularly on the perimeter, should fit in well with the young roster in Iowa City."
Shon Morris - - College Basketball Analyst, BTN

"I think Fran McCaffery is a good choice for Iowa and I think Iowa is a good choice for Fran. I hope he does well. He guided Siena to NCAA Tournament appearances three straight years and posted good tournament wins over Vanderbilt (2008) and Ohio State (2009)."
John Feinstein - - Sportswriter and author

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